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1 PSYC401A/501A: Principles of Psychophysiology Spring, 2011, Mondays, 3:00-5:45 p.m. Room 405 Modern Languages Course Resources Online: jallen.faculty.arizona.edu Follow link to Courses Administrivia Drops and Adds Overview of Syllabus Class Format Substantive Topics General Definition and Interpretive Issues Review of studies that highlight the utility of a psychophysiological approach General Issues Definition Scope Problems of inference Problems and Prospects for the field Definition Psychophysiology Definition Darrow (1964) Presidential Address: the science which concerns physiological activities which underlie or relate to psychic events Ax (1964) Opening Editorial, Psychophysiology Definition Stern (1964), also in the 1 st issue of Psychophysiology I would like to offer as a working suggestion that any research in which the dependent variable is a physiological measure and the independent variable a "behavioral" one should be considered psychophysiological research Yet he concludes… “I wish our editor the best of luck in defining the scope of articles acceptable for our journal.”

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    PSYC401A/501A:Principles of Psychophysiology

    Spring, 2011, Mondays, 3:00-5:45 p.m.Room 405 Modern Languages

    Course Resources Online:jallen.faculty.arizona.edu

    Follow link to Courses

    Administrivia

    Drops and AddsOverview of SyllabusClass Format

    Substantive Topics General Definition and Interpretive IssuesReview of studies that highlight the utility of a

    psychophysiological approach

    General Issues

    Definition ScopeProblems of inferenceProblems and Prospects for the field

    Definition

    Psycho physiology

    Definition Darrow (1964) Presidential Address:

    the science which concerns physiological activities which underlie or relate to psychic events

    Ax (1964) Opening Editorial, Psychophysiology

    Definition Stern (1964), also in the 1st issue of PsychophysiologyI would like to offer as a working suggestion that any research in

    which the dependent variable is a physiological measure and the independent variable a "behavioral" one should be considered psychophysiological research

    Yet he concludes… “I wish our editor the best of luck in defining the scope of articles acceptable for our journal.”

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    Definition

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=w06zvM2x_lw

    Definition Cacioppo Tassinary & Berntson (2007):

    the scientific study of social, psychological, and behavioral phenomena as related to and revealed through physiological principles and events in functional organisms

    Allen (2013, this very moment): The use of a particular set of physiologically-based dependent or

    independent variables to gain insights into psychological questions; when done well, psychophysiological methodsprovide an independent method (to behavior and self report) provide information that is not accessible through other

    psychological methods link behavior and experience to underlying systems, by using

    paradigms with solid theoretical foundations Distinguished from: Physiological psychology, Behavioral

    Neuroscience

    Scope“Classic Measures”

    Skin Conductance (level and response) Cardiac measures (heart rate, variability,

    contractility, both SNS and PNS measures, BP, plethysmography)

    Oculomotor and pupilometric measures Electromyographic activity Respiration Gastrointestinal activity Penile and vaginal plethysmography Electroencephalographic oscillatory

    measures (frequency domain EEG and sleep psychophysiology)

    Event-related brain potentials Event-related frequency changes

    “Newer Measures” Hormonal and Endocrinological measures Immune function Functional neuroimaging

    PET fMRI Optical Imaging

    MEG

    Manipulations Classical Biofeedback Rapid Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation Transcranial Ultrasound

    Cognitive psychophysiology

    Developmental psychophysiology

    Clinical psychophysiology

    Social psychophysiology

    Applied psychophysiology

    Electrodermal psychophysiology

    Cardiovascular psychophysiology

    Electroencephalo-graphic psychophysiology

    Electro-myographic psychophysiology

    Hemodynamic psychophysiology

    Etc…

    Thematic x Systemic Psychophysiology

    Lie Detection

    Cardio effects prejudice

    EEG Asym Inhibited kids

    fMRI duing emotion

    fMRI duing emotion

    Neurowear!

    Problems of Inference:Correlate Vs Substrate

    Is observed physiological activity a substrate of observed behavior? BEWAREHelpful CriteriaIs Φ necessary for behavior?If Φ removed, would behavior be altered?

    But ultimately, not easily resolvedA scientific theory is a description of causal interrelations. Psychophysiological correlations are not causal. Thus in scientific theories, psychophysiological correlations are monstrosities. This does not mean that such correlations have no part in science. They are the instruments by which the psychologist may test his theories. (Gardiner, Metcalf, & Beebe-Center, 1937, p. 385) or her

    Problems of Inference

    From Cacioppo, Tassinary, & Berntson, 2000, 2007

    Only these types of relationships would allow a formal specification that psychological elements are a function of specific physiological elements

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    Reducing the Complexity

    From Cacioppo, Tassinary, & Berntson, 2000

    Typical Scenarios

    Typical structure/assumption of psychophysiological or imaging study: P(Φ| Ψ) > 0

    Typical structure/assumption of biofeedback study: P(Ψ| Φ ) > 0

    Typical hunt for “markers” or biological substrate Study begins P(Φ| Ψ) > 0 Desirable (but often invalid) inference

    P(Ψ|Φ) > 0 Only valid given 1:1 relationship of Ψ and Φ

    Use complementary approaches; e.g., fMRI = P(Φ|Ψ) Lesion = P(Ψ|Φ)

    The Taxonomy of Φ and Ψ

    From Cacioppo, Tassinary, & Berntson, 2000

    Many-to-one, Context DependentExample: affect and HR

    in IAPS paradigmInference given Φ: none

    One-to-one, Context DependentExample: medical tests

    (fasting cholesterol)Inference given Φ: yes, if

    conditions were met

    Many-to-one, Context IndependentExample: arousal and skin

    conductanceInference given Φ: none

    One-to-one, Context independentExample: IT15 near

    end of short arm chromosome 4 and Huntington’s

    Inference given Φ: definitely ψ

    The Inference Problem IllustratedAzari et al. (2001). Neural correlates of religious experience. European Journal of Neuroscience, 13, 1649-1652.

    Ten Years Later, and …Kanai et al. (2011). Political orientations are correlated with Brain Structure. Current Biology, 21, 677–680.

    Although our data do not determine whether these regions play a causal role in the formation of political attitudes, they converge with previous work to suggest a possible link between brain structure and psychological mechanisms that mediate politicalattitudes.

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    Yet Another Example!

    “Our data confirm the emergence of conscious versus unconscious experience in the neural network of superior and inferior parietal lobule, left occipital cortex, precuneus, and frontal brain areas including BA 6 and BA 10.” page 2124

    Problems and Prospects for Psychophysiology

    Problems/Challenges Interpretive ambiguity Time resolution and time courses of various

    systems/measures differ substantially Spatial resolution What is the functional significance of the observed

    physiological measure?

    Problems and Prospects for Psychophysiology

    Prospects Non-invasive Measures of real-time information May be sensitive to things that we ourselves cannot be Ideally suited for populations that have limited verbal/cognitive capacity May tap function at roughly the proper level of the nervous system to be useful

    to psychological investigators Psychophysiology is now more integrated into psychology as a whole -- you will

    see it in "nonspecialty" journals More and more “canned” packages make it accessible to the novice, but novices

    need advice and consultation! Even though there will always be newer technologies (e.g., PET, SPECT,

    MEG/SQUID, MRI, Functional MRI, etc.), traditional psychophysiology Has generally excellent sreal-time resolution Is flexible Is cost-effective Can be integrated with many of the newer technologies Principles generalize across many measures Newer technologies nonetheless based on fundamental principles of

    psychophysiology, and are in fact, psychophysiological measures When you tell folks at a party that you are a psychophysiologist rather than a

    psychologist, you are spared hearing the history of peoples' family pathology

    A few selected studies to highlight the utility of a psychophysiological approach

    Bauer (1984): ProsopagnosiaÖhman & Soares (1993): PhobiasSpeigel (1985): HypnosisDeception Detection studiesInvestigation of Persistent Vegetative StateBrain-Computer Interfaces for assisted

    communication

    Bauer (1984): Neuropsychologia

    ProsopagnosiaAdministered a version of the Guilty Knowledge Test

    (GKT)As administered to the prosopagnosic patientSet A consisted of 10 photographs of very famous folks; Set B

    consisted of 8 family membersDuring the display, five choices for the correct name were presented

    auditorially

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    JoeDickEltonGeorgeBill…

    Bauer (1984): Neuropsychologia

    Results Patient naming: 0/10 famous faces, 0/8 family members Controls naming = 9/10 famous, 0/8 of patient's family members Electrodermally, patient produced largest SCR to correct alternative for 60% of famous faces (controls 80%, ns difference), for 62.5% of family members (controls 37.5%)

    Conclusions Dissociation between psychophysiological and behavioral measures -

    - psychophysiology told us something that the patient could not Patient can, at an autonomic level, properly identify faces viz. that "prosopagnosia involves a functional defect not at the

    perceptual level itself, but at a stage of processing where adequate perceptual information is utilized in complex decisions about the stimulus identity" (p.463)

    A few selected studies to highlight the utility of a psychophysiological approach

    Bauer (1984): ProsopagnosiaÖhman & Soares (1993): PhobiasSpeigel (1985): HypnosisDeception Detection studiesInvestigation of Persistent Vegetative StateBrain-Computer Interfaces for assisted

    communication

    Öhman & Soares (1993)Journal of Abnormal Psychology

    Hypothesize that information processing of the phobic stimulus is rooted in archaic information processing mechanisms outside of the control of conscious intentions

    Use a CS+/CS- paradigm for fear-relevant and fear-irrelevant stimuli Fear relevant is snake/spider; irrelevant is a flower or mushroom During acquisition trials, CS+ is shocked, CS- is not This leads to larger SCR to CS+ than CS- , and when stimuli are presented

    above threshold (with awareness), no difference between fear-relevant and fear-irrelevant

    After acquisition, masked presentations (30 msec, followed by 100 msec mask)

    Electrodermally, masking effectively eliminates the difference between CS+ and CS- for fear-irrelevant stimuli, but the difference between CS+/CS- is preserved for fear-relevant stimuli

    Öhman & Soares (1993)Journal of Abnormal Psychology

    Öhman & Soares’ ConclusionsFear conditioning to nonprepared stimuli may

    involve conscious mechanismsFear conditioning to prepared stimuli may be

    possible through mechanisms outside of conscious/controlled information processingLatter system may be fast and sensitive to

    danger cuesMay also explain why exposure therapy is

    critical to decrease the autonomic responses

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    A few selected studies to highlight the utility of a psychophysiological approach

    Bauer (1984): ProsopagnosiaÖhman & Soares (1993): PhobiasSpeigel (1985): HypnosisDeception Detection studiesInvestigation of Persistent Vegetative StateBrain-Computer Interfaces for assisted

    communication

    Speigel, Cutcomb, Ren, & Pribram. (1985) Journal of Abnormal Psychology

    Hypnosis individual difference variable, assessed via responsiveness to suggestions

    Two issues recurrently arise in hypnosis: (1) Do the effects have veracity? (2) If so, how are they accomplished?

    ERPs 101: Signal averaging

    Ongoing EEG

    Visual Event-related Potential

    N400

    N1

    P1 P2P3

    Stimuli

    Speigel, Cutcomb, Ren, & Pribram. (1985) Journal of Abnormal Psychology

    The study design Very high or very low hypnotizable subjects

    selected Given three suggestions: Hypnotic enhancement Hypnotic diminution Hypnotic obstruction

    An additional button-pressing control group

    Hypnosis and Speigel continued Subsequent study using somatosensory ERPs found

    that suggestion to block mildly painful stimulus reduce P1 and P3 amplitudes in high- but not low-hypnotizable subjects.

    Also found that suggestions to increase intensity resulted in increase in P1 amplitude, but again, only in the high hypnotizable subjects

    Collectively these studies may suggest alterations at the level of signal detection, not simply interpretation of the signal

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    A few selected studies to highlight the utility of a psychophysiological approach

    Bauer (1984): ProsopagnosiaÖhman & Soares (1993): PhobiasSpeigel (1985): HypnosisDeception Detection studiesInvestigation of Persistent Vegetative StateBrain-Computer Interfaces for assisted

    communication

    Farwell & Donchin (1991) Psychophysiology

    Conventional Polygraphy unacceptably inaccurateRather than rely on autonomic arousal, could

    rely on a cognitive response of recognition

    Rationale

    Allen, Iacono, & Danielson (1992) Psychophysiology

    A few selected studies to highlight the utility of a psychophysiological approach

    Bauer (1984): ProsopagnosiaÖhman & Soares (1993): PhobiasSpeigel (1985): HypnosisDeception Detection studiesInvestigation of Persistent Vegetative StateBrain-Computer Interfaces for assisted

    communication

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    Persistent Vegetative State

    PVS patients typically are not non-responsiveBut responses to varied stimuli lack: voluntary components cognitive aspects evidence of awareness of self evidence of awareness of surroundings.

    No meaningful communicationMCS (Minimally Conscious State) by contrast:Minimal, if even highly inconsistent, signs of

    conscious behavior can be observed

    Persistent Vegetative State

    Diagnostic errors in PVS up to 40% (Andrews et al., 1996)Might psychophysiological assessment help?How best to validate such new measures against

    some gold standard when diagnostic errors are so common?Create continuous measure and link to physiology

    (Wijnen, van Boxtel, Eilander, & de Gelder (2007) Clinical Neurophysiology)

    Range from complete non-response to normal consciousness

    Mismatch Negativity

    Discovered by Näätänen, Gaillard, & Mäntysalo, 1978 Rare deviant (“Afwigkend geluid”) elicits sustained negative

    voltage at scalp, maximal at fronto-central sites Regardless of whether the stimuli are attended Can vary in pitch, loudness, duration

    Longitudinal Study

    Create continuous measure and link to physiology (Wijnen, van Boxtel, Eilander, & de Gelder (2007) Clinical Neurophysiology)

    Ten severely brain-injured patients (age 8-25)Longitudinal assessment starting 9 days after

    admission (and then every 2 weeks)

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    Longitudinal StudyPredictive value?MMN during first assessment strongly predicted

    level of consciousness at discharge (β=-.94, p

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    P300-BCI. Rows and columns of letter strings are lighted in rapid succession.Whenever the desired letter (P) is among the lighted string, a P300 appears in the EEG (after Sellers & Donchin 2006; Piccione et al.2006).

    Figure from Birbaumer, 2006

    Can’t we speed things up?

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2KtMCX7FfZ0

    From Ku¨bler& Neumann (2005), Progress in Brain Research, 150, 513-525

    Operant methods (Birbaumer et al.)

    Top right: Senso-motor-rhythm (SMR) oscillations fromsensorimotor cortex during inhibition of movement and imagery or execution of movement (EEGtrace below). On the left part of the picture is the feedback display with the target goal on the right side of the screen indicating the required SMR increase (target at bottom) or SMR decrease (target at top). The curser reflecting the actual SMR is depicted in red moving from the right side of the screen toward the target goal.

    Senso-motor Rhythm Training

    Birbaumer, 2006

    Senso-motor Rhythm Training

    Patients’ task is to move the cursor into the target. Cursor movement is indicated by the squares (only one square is visible). The cursor moves steadily from left to right, vertical deflections correspond to the

    SMR amplitude. EEG frequency power:

    Bold line: frequency power spectrum when the cursor had to be moved toward the top target

    Dashed line: cursor had to be moved toward the bottom target.

    Kübler & Birbaumer, 2008, Clinical Neurophysiology 119, 2658–2666

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    Slow Cortical Potentials (SCP)

    Targets are presented at the top or bottom of the screen. Patients’ task is to move the cursor (yellow dot) toward the target Cursor moves steadily from left to right and its vertical deflection corresponds to the

    SCP amplitude. A negative SCP amplitude (dashed line) moves the cursor toward the top, positive

    SCP amplitude (bold line) toward the bottom target. Before each trial, a baseline is recorded indicated by the green bar. At time point -2 s the task is presented, at -500 ms the baseline is recorded and at

    zero cursor movement starts. Kübler & Birbaumer, 2008, Clinical Neurophysiology 119, 2658–2666

    BCI using slow cortical potentials (SCP depicted at the top). Patient selects one letter from the letter string on screen (right below) with positive SCPs, the spelled letters appear on top of the screen

    Hinterberger .. Birbaumer, 2004, IEEE Transactions of Biomed Engr, 51

    Coming Up:

    Next class a week from Monday…Reviews of:Basic ElectricityBasic Neurophysiology and Neuroanatomy

    Don’t forget to turn in your 3x5 cardsNameEmailSection (401 or 501)Questions/Comments